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Welfare benefits: does conditionality work?

Welfare benefits: does conditionality work? Presentation by Professor Peter Dwyer to the APPG for Social Science and Policy House of Commons, 14 July 2015 Funded by the ESRC Centres and Large G rants S cheme. Welfare Conditionality: Sanctions, Support and Behaviour Change ( 2013-2018).

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Welfare benefits: does conditionality work?

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  1. Welfare benefits: does conditionality work? Presentation by Professor Peter Dwyer to the APPG for Social Science and PolicyHouse of Commons, 14 July 2015 Funded by the ESRC Centres and Large Grants Scheme

  2. Welfare Conditionality: Sanctions, Support and Behaviour Change (2013-2018) 2 Twin aims To consider the ethics and efficacyof welfare conditionality Explore conditionality across a range of policy domains Recipients of social security benefits (unemployed people, lone parents, disabled people, UC), homeless people, social tenants, individuals/families subject to antisocial behaviour orders/family intervention projects, offenders and migrants Fieldwork with three sets of respondents • Semi-structured interviews with 40 policymakers/actors • 24 focus groups with frontline welfare practitioners • Three rounds of repeat QL interviews with a diverse sample of 480 WSU who are subject to conditionality (up to 1440 interviews in total)

  3. Welfare conditionality: what is it, how is it intended to work? 3 • Purpose • Realign the relationship between entitlement/support and conduct/behaviour (Dwyer 1998, 2004; Betzelt & Bothfeld, 2011)DWP statement 2008: Conditionality embodies the principle that aspects of state support, usually financial or practical, are dependent on citizens meeting certain conditions which are invariably behavioural • Aspects • Amorphous(behaving responsibly) – concrete(tightly specified) conditionality (Paz-Fuchs, 2008) • Conditional(sanctioning irresponsible behaviour) and earned (rewarding positive behaviour) citizenship (Flint, 2009) • SanctionsandSupport(sticks and carrots), positive potential for coercive welfare (Phoenix, 2008)

  4. Case 1: sanctions 4 A missed appointment, they said. They put me under the sanction… I was on zero income. Zero Housing Benefit, zero Council Tax Benefit. Towards the end I put in a nil income form, which activated my Housing Benefit temporarily. But I think once I had nil income for four and a half months… I turned to prostitution. It was the most horrific time of my life. I got raped. I got raped. I got [hesitates] beaten up, raped and buggered, trying to [hesitates] earn money via prostitution. I was working with [two support organisations]. They were liaising with the benefits as well. It made no difference. (Jane, sanctioned ESA claimant)

  5. Case 2: support 5 [Support organisation] are pukka, everything, paperwork, like support if I've got problems… When I used to feel really low, I used to hit the bottle. Now rather than hit the bottle I'll just ring [support worker] up and he'll say, 'Right do you want to come to speak to someone?' You know, which is great, that's all I need. Whereas if I didn't have them I don't know where I'd be now… I've never felt more confident. Now I've got my head screwed back on. I've got a job interview for [company] on the 17th through these guys. They're interested in me. So hopefully, fingers crossed, I'll be off benefits and back on proper money. Yes, that's all I want. (John, ex offender, ESA claimant) (Jane, sanctioned ESA claimant)

  6. Behaviour change 6 • Initial findings • International evidence indicates that benefit sanctions substantially raise exits from benefits, and may increase short-term job entry; but there are unfavourable longer-term outcomes for earnings, job quality and employment retention • Those with specific vulnerabilities and individuals with multiple and complex needs, such as lone parents, disabled people or homeless people, have been disproportionately affected by intensifying welfare conditionality • Concerns about the unintended consequences that welfare conditionality may trigger include: distancing people from support; causing hardship and even destitution; displacing rather than resolving issues such as long-term worklessness and substance misuse; and negative impacts on children

  7. Peter Dwyer, Principal Investigator Peter.dwyer@york.ac.uk Fleur Hughes, Project Manager Fleur.hughes@york.ac.uk www.welfareconditionality.ac.uk Follow us @WelCond

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